Like all affluent suburbs, West Bridgford is well provided
with retail facilities, and among its shopping parades are those in Melton,
Loughborough and Abbey Roads, Compton Acres, Hilton Crescent and Trent
Boulevard. The principal shopping thoroughfare is Central Avenue, which leads
off Tudor Square, with businesses now creeping into the ends of Rectory,
Albert, Bridgford, Davies and above all Gordon Road.
Traditionally, Central Avenue boasted all the usual run of
shops for food and household items, including a Co-op, and the Tudor Cinema.
Since the turn of the millennium the emphasis has changed, not as in so many
places downwards in the direction of pound shops and charity shops, but towards
refreshment. In this small area there are well over a dozen coffee shops, bars
and restaurants catering for the well-heeled population, plus a handful of
travel agents, opticians, florists, building societies, pharmacies, and other
businesses. As an evening venue, Central Avenue offers an attractive and relatively
quiet alternative to the centre of Nottingham.
Unusually, compared with most shopping streets, Central Avenue is not completely hemmed in by shops, and for part of its eastern side is bordered by what has long been known as the “croquet lawn”, in effect an extension of Bridgford Park. Once lined by giant poplars, in Springtime magnificent blossoms are now to be found here, and the area continues to rebuff the encroachment of car parking and other philistine developments, which would destroy much of the attractiveness that brings people here in the first place. Another location that features such an arrangement of adjacent greenery is the east London suburb of Wanstead, and the accompanying illustration shows Wanstead High Street, E.11. Wanstead has an ambience, a pleasant “feel”, very similar to that of West Bridgford, although it enjoys the additional attraction of having its own tube station..
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